Cargando…

“I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa

INTRODUCTION: It is common in urban African settings for postpartum women to temporarily return to family in distant settings. We sought to explore mobility among peripartum HIV‐positive women to understand the timing and motivation of travel, particularly vis‐à‐vis delivery, and how it may affect h...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Clouse, Kate, Fox, Matthew P, Mongwenyana, Constance, Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng, Buthelezi, Sizakele, Bokaba, Dorah, Norris, Shane A, Bassett, Jean, Lurie, Mark N, Aronoff, David M, Vermund, Sten H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6053484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30027665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25121
_version_ 1783340832215007232
author Clouse, Kate
Fox, Matthew P
Mongwenyana, Constance
Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng
Buthelezi, Sizakele
Bokaba, Dorah
Norris, Shane A
Bassett, Jean
Lurie, Mark N
Aronoff, David M
Vermund, Sten H
author_facet Clouse, Kate
Fox, Matthew P
Mongwenyana, Constance
Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng
Buthelezi, Sizakele
Bokaba, Dorah
Norris, Shane A
Bassett, Jean
Lurie, Mark N
Aronoff, David M
Vermund, Sten H
author_sort Clouse, Kate
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: It is common in urban African settings for postpartum women to temporarily return to family in distant settings. We sought to explore mobility among peripartum HIV‐positive women to understand the timing and motivation of travel, particularly vis‐à‐vis delivery, and how it may affect healthcare access. METHODS: Using the same mobility measurements within three different studies, we examined long‐distance travel of mother and infant before and after delivery in three diverse clinics within greater Johannesburg, South Africa (n = 150). Participants were interviewed prior to delivery at two sites (n = 125) and after delivery at one (n = 25). Quantitative and qualitative results are reported. RESULTS: Among 150 women, median age was 29 years (IQR: 26 to 34) and 36.3% were employed. Overall, 76.7% of the participants were born in South Africa: 32.7% in Gauteng Province (Johannesburg area) and 44.0% in other South African provinces, but birthplace varied greatly by site. Almost half (44.0%) planned to travel around delivery; nearly all after delivery. Median duration of stay was 30 days (IQR: 24 to 90) overall, but varied from 60 days at two sites to just 7 days at another. Participants discussed travel to eight of South Africa's nine provinces and four countries. Travel most frequently was to visit family, typically to receive help with the new baby. Nearly all the employed participants planned to return to work in Johannesburg after delivery, sometimes leaving the infant in the care of family outside of Johannesburg. All expressed their intent to continue HIV care for themselves and their infant, but few planned to seek care at the destination site, and care for the infant was emphasized over care for the mother. CONCLUSIONS: We identified frequent travel in the peripartum period with substantial differences in travel patterns by site. Participants more frequently discussed seeking care for the infant than for themselves. HIV‐exposed children often were left in the care of family members in distant areas. Our results show the frequent mobility of women and infants in the peripartum period. This underscores the challenge of ensuring a continuity of HIV care in a fragmented healthcare system that is not adapted for a mobile population.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6053484
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60534842018-07-23 “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa Clouse, Kate Fox, Matthew P Mongwenyana, Constance Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng Buthelezi, Sizakele Bokaba, Dorah Norris, Shane A Bassett, Jean Lurie, Mark N Aronoff, David M Vermund, Sten H J Int AIDS Soc Research Articles INTRODUCTION: It is common in urban African settings for postpartum women to temporarily return to family in distant settings. We sought to explore mobility among peripartum HIV‐positive women to understand the timing and motivation of travel, particularly vis‐à‐vis delivery, and how it may affect healthcare access. METHODS: Using the same mobility measurements within three different studies, we examined long‐distance travel of mother and infant before and after delivery in three diverse clinics within greater Johannesburg, South Africa (n = 150). Participants were interviewed prior to delivery at two sites (n = 125) and after delivery at one (n = 25). Quantitative and qualitative results are reported. RESULTS: Among 150 women, median age was 29 years (IQR: 26 to 34) and 36.3% were employed. Overall, 76.7% of the participants were born in South Africa: 32.7% in Gauteng Province (Johannesburg area) and 44.0% in other South African provinces, but birthplace varied greatly by site. Almost half (44.0%) planned to travel around delivery; nearly all after delivery. Median duration of stay was 30 days (IQR: 24 to 90) overall, but varied from 60 days at two sites to just 7 days at another. Participants discussed travel to eight of South Africa's nine provinces and four countries. Travel most frequently was to visit family, typically to receive help with the new baby. Nearly all the employed participants planned to return to work in Johannesburg after delivery, sometimes leaving the infant in the care of family outside of Johannesburg. All expressed their intent to continue HIV care for themselves and their infant, but few planned to seek care at the destination site, and care for the infant was emphasized over care for the mother. CONCLUSIONS: We identified frequent travel in the peripartum period with substantial differences in travel patterns by site. Participants more frequently discussed seeking care for the infant than for themselves. HIV‐exposed children often were left in the care of family members in distant areas. Our results show the frequent mobility of women and infants in the peripartum period. This underscores the challenge of ensuring a continuity of HIV care in a fragmented healthcare system that is not adapted for a mobile population. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6053484/ /pubmed/30027665 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25121 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & sons Ltd on behalf of the International AIDS Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Clouse, Kate
Fox, Matthew P
Mongwenyana, Constance
Motlhatlhedi, Molebogeng
Buthelezi, Sizakele
Bokaba, Dorah
Norris, Shane A
Bassett, Jean
Lurie, Mark N
Aronoff, David M
Vermund, Sten H
“I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title_full “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title_fullStr “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title_short “I will leave the baby with my mother”: Long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among HIV‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in South Africa
title_sort “i will leave the baby with my mother”: long‐distance travel and follow‐up care among hiv‐positive pregnant and postpartum women in south africa
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6053484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30027665
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25121
work_keys_str_mv AT clousekate iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT foxmatthewp iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT mongwenyanaconstance iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT motlhatlhedimolebogeng iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT buthelezisizakele iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT bokabadorah iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT norrisshanea iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT bassettjean iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT luriemarkn iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT aronoffdavidm iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica
AT vermundstenh iwillleavethebabywithmymotherlongdistancetravelandfollowupcareamonghivpositivepregnantandpostpartumwomeninsouthafrica